A MRE who receives a salary from a Moroccan employer is subject to Moroccan income tax (IR) by withholding at source, even if they reside abroad. The Moroccan General Tax Code (CGI) taxes income from Moroccan sources, regardless of the recipient's residence. This guide explains the rates in force in 2026, the withholding tax mechanism, the advantages of the 20% flat tax rate, and how to optimize your situation through bilateral tax conventions.
Costs & fees
| Moroccan IR on salaries (progressive rate) | 0% to 38% | According to 2026 CGI Moroccan brackets |
| Non-resident flat tax rate (option) | 20% | On income > MAD 120,000/year since LF2025 |
| Tax residency certificate | Free | Issued by the tax authority of the host country |
| Bi-national accountant/tax advisor | €300–1,500/year | For optimization and compliance in both countries |
Timeline
Determine Your Tax Status in Morocco (Resident or Non-Resident)
You are a Moroccan tax resident if you have your habitual tax domicile in Morocco, stay there more than 183 days per year, or have your center of economic interests there. If you reside mainly abroad and do not have a permanent domicile in Morocco, you are a Moroccan tax non-resident. This status is crucial: non-residents are only taxable in Morocco on their Moroccan-source income (territoriality principle), while residents are taxable on their worldwide income. Non-resident status can give access to the 20% flat tax rate introduced by LF2025.
💡 Tip — Request a tax residency certificate in your host country: it is the official proof of your Moroccan non-resident status.
⚠️ Warning — If you maintain a permanent residence in Morocco (family home, apartment), you may be considered a Moroccan tax resident even if you mainly stay abroad.
Identify Moroccan-Source Income Subject to Withholding
Moroccan-source income subject to withholding includes: salaries paid by a Moroccan employer (company or individual established in Morocco), dividends distributed by Moroccan companies (15% withholding, or 7.5% if reinvested), interest on Moroccan bank accounts (30% withholding for non-residents since LF2023), income from Moroccan collective investment schemes (OPCVM), fees paid by Moroccan clients to non-resident service providers (10% withholding). Rents on real estate in Morocco are not subject to withholding at source but to IR by annual declaration.
💡 Tip — Your Moroccan payslip must mention the IR withheld each month. Check that the calculation matches the official brackets.
Check Whether a Bilateral Tax Convention Applies
If your country of residence has signed a tax convention with Morocco (France, Spain, Belgium, Italy, Netherlands, Germany, UK, etc.), this convention may modify the taxation rules for your Moroccan income. For example, the France-Morocco convention provides that salaries are taxable in the country of employment (Morocco if your employer is in Morocco), but France may also tax them with a tax credit. The existence of a convention does not automatically eliminate Moroccan taxation, but regulates the distribution of rights between the two states and avoids effective double taxation.
💡 Tip — Consult the list of Moroccan tax conventions on tax.gov.ma to check if your country of residence has signed an agreement with Morocco.
⚠️ Warning — If you reside in Canada or a country without a convention with Morocco, you risk double taxation without an integrated compensation mechanism.
Obtain a Tax Residency Certificate in the Host Country
The tax residency certificate is an official document issued by the tax authority of your host country certifying that you are a tax resident there. This document is essential to: benefit from the advantages of bilateral tax conventions, justify your non-resident status to the Moroccan DGI and your employer, request a refund of Moroccan tax if excessive withholdings have been deducted. To obtain it: in France, request it from your tax office via cerfa form 5000 or 5001. In Belgium, via SPF Finances. In Germany, from your Finanzamt.
💡 Tip — This certificate generally needs to be renewed annually. Some countries issue it with a one-year validity.
⚠️ Warning — The tax residency certificate and the administrative residency certificate (residence permit) are two different documents. Only the tax one is relevant for tax matters.
Submit the Certificate to the Employer or DGI to Adjust the Rate
Once obtained, submit your tax residency certificate to your Moroccan employer so they apply the correct withholding rate. If your country of residence has a convention with Morocco that reduces the applicable rate, your employer can adjust their withholdings. You can also submit this certificate directly to the Moroccan DGI (tax conventions department) to request a refund of excessive withholdings from previous years. Since 2025, the DGI has simplified the procedure for refunding excessive withholdings for non-residents via its online portal tax.gov.ma.
💡 Tip — Submit your tax residency certificate at the beginning of the year to your Moroccan employer so adjustments apply from January.
In depth
The Finance Law 2025 introduced a 20% flat tax rate for non-residents receiving Moroccan-source income exceeding MAD 120,000 per year. This optional rate (at the taxpayer's option) can be advantageous for MRE whose Moroccan income falls in the highest progressive brackets (34% to 38%). However, case-by-case analysis is needed: if your Moroccan income is below MAD 120,000/year, the progressive rate may be more favorable. LF2025 also strengthened the reporting obligations of Moroccan employers towards non-resident employees. The territoriality rules of the Moroccan CGI (Article 23) precisely define what constitutes Moroccan-source income: a salary is Moroccan-source if paid by an employer established in Morocco, regardless of the physical location of the work (which can create complex situations for international remote work). Since the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) came into force in 2019, the Moroccan DGI automatically receives information on bank accounts of Moroccan residents abroad, strengthening bilateral tax transparency.
❌ Common mistakes to avoid
- ✕Believing that working for a Moroccan company from abroad exempts from Moroccan income tax
- ✕Not submitting your tax residency certificate to your Moroccan employer and suffering over-withholding
- ✕Confusing the 20% flat tax rate (advantageous option above 120k MAD) with the standard rate
- ✕Forgetting to declare Moroccan dividends and interest in the country of residence (risk of unresolved double taxation)
🔗 Official links and resources
DGI Morocco - Tax Portal
Moroccan tax declarations, payments and tax texts
DGI - Moroccan Tax Conventions
List of all tax conventions signed by Morocco
DGI - General Tax Code 2026
Moroccan CGI text with 2026 IR rates
French Tax Service - Residency Certificate
To obtain your tax residency certificate in France
❓ Frequently asked questions
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